I'm a fan of Open Source and have a growing interest in serverless and edge computing. I'm not a big fan of spiders, but they're doing good work eating bugs. I also stream on Twitch.
⚡️ A resource to help figure out what JavaScript array method would be best to use at any given time
JavaScript Array Explorer
When I was first learning array methods, I spent a lot of time digging through the docs to find the appropriate one, and I had to search one by one. I made this resource to help people find the correct array method a bit more naturally. You can narrow down what you want to do and explore until you find what's most useful to you.
I realize that there are about a million ways that this resource can be set up, and some of the taxonomy is necessarily opionionated. I tried to focus on what I thought would have helped me learn the best, rather than industry standard delineations (mutator, accessor, iteration, for example). There are a lot of resources that already divide the methods this way, so if that style of learning suits you…
I created a repo last year to demonstrate some stuff about array methods: github.com/pedroapfilho/array-methods , feel free to check it out!
Oh that's so helpful. Do you mind if I attach that link to my blog post?
Of course not! Please do!
Sarah Edo created a really awesome tool called JavaScript Array Explorer.
sdras / array-explorer
⚡️ A resource to help figure out what JavaScript array method would be best to use at any given time
JavaScript Array Explorer
When I was first learning array methods, I spent a lot of time digging through the docs to find the appropriate one, and I had to search one by one. I made this resource to help people find the correct array method a bit more naturally. You can narrow down what you want to do and explore until you find what's most useful to you.
Check out the site here: arrayexplorer.netlify.com/
Or if you prefer codepen: codepen.io/sdras/full/gogVRX/
I realize that there are about a million ways that this resource can be set up, and some of the taxonomy is necessarily opionionated. I tried to focus on what I thought would have helped me learn the best, rather than industry standard delineations (mutator, accessor, iteration, for example). There are a lot of resources that already divide the methods this way, so if that style of learning suits you…